EU Commission Says Schengen Suspension Could Be Extended, 60% Of Migrants Should Be Sent Back.
The European
Commission said Tuesday it could agree to a suspension of border-free travel in
the Schengen zone of up to two years, and that nearly two thirds of migrants
entering the EU in December were not eligible for asylum because they did not
come from conflict zones.
The refugee crisis has meant some European
countries have reintroduced border controls in the passport-free Schengen zone
of 26 nations. Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Austria, France have introduced border
controls with a six month limit. Non-EU member state Norway has introduced
temporary controls. Poland is considering doing the same.
On Monday (25 January), EU home affairs
ministers meeting in Amsterdam called on the Commission to extend the time
limit countries are allowed to suspend Schengen. Article 26 of the Schengen
treaty could see it suspended for up to two years, if public order and security
concerns are judged serious enough. A decision on some kind of extension will
likely be needed by May.
Today, the Commission said it did not think
that the situation was serious enough to warrant the extension. But, it said it
was pursuing options available to it under Article 26.
“We know that migratory flows are not going to
be subsiding soon and as the weather changes are even likely to increase. So if
situation does not change there could indeed be justifications under public
order and security reasons to maintain internal controls as long as external
borders not effectively controlled,” said spokeswoman Natasha Bertaud.
Economic
migrants
Commission First Vice-President Frans
Timmermans, President Jean-Claude Juncker’s right-hand man, made the comments
about economic migrants to a Dutch newspaper.
The European Commission said the figures were
from Frontex, the EU’s border agency. They were not yet public, Bertaud told
reporters in Brussels.
“[The figures] showed that for December, the
share of people not likely to be eligible for asylum is a lot higher than we’ve
seen in rest of 2015.”
She said the figure, the latest available, was
“roughly 60%”. What we are seeing in January is that this might be dropping
again, Bertaud said.
Timmermans had used the figures to highlight
the need for an effective, EU-wide migrant return policy. “The point First
Vice-President Timmermans was trying to make is that we have to focus on return
policies. Citizens’ support for genuine asylum seekers will be weakened if
those who don’t have the right to international protection are also allowed to
stay in Europe,” Bertaud added.
“We are determined to do whatever it takes,”
said Commission Chief Spokesman Margaritis Schinas, “to make sure there is a
clear differentiation between those who are protected under international law
and economic migrants, which are trying to seize the opportunity to enter
Europe and have to be returned.”
But the system – involving ‘hotspots’ for
registration, relocation centres for approved refugees, and eventual
relocation, is not working.
At yesterday’s meeting in Amsterdam, two Greek
representatives said they had tried but failed to send back migrants from
Morocco and Pakistan.
The executive admitted that there were
difficulties in returning economic migrants. The EU has a readmission agreement
with Pakistan, but there had been problems with returning Pakistan nationals
from Greece since last year. There is no readmission agreement with Morocco
yet, but it was being negotiated.
“We still have problems getting readmission
put into practice,” Bertaud said today. “What the Commission is doing now is
looking at possible incentives, both positive and negative, to make sure it is
applied.”
A Pakistani man was stabbed to death on the Greek-Macedonian
border yesterday. The incident occurred near no-man’s-land on the border
between Greece and Macedonia, where thousands of migrants of different
nationalities gather daily, hoping to secure passage to other destinations in
Europe.
Two other Pakistanis were hurt in the early
morning attack allegedly carried out by Afghans, local police said.
Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos
said after Monday’s meeting in Amsterdam that member states needed to take some
of the blame for its failures. The relocation of refugees has so far been a
failure.
“We find ourselves with more internal border
controls, questionable legislative procedures towards asylum seekers or
refugees, less solidarity, less responsibility, and more individual and
uncoordinated decisions,” he said.
“I will be very frank with you, this year has
not started very easily. I can tell you I am not optimistic but I am not
defeatist, and neither is the Commission.”
But Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said
this morning, “I feel that we in the EU are now committing ritual suicide and
we’re just looking on.”
Denmark today votes on laws requiring migrants
to give up their valuables to pay for their housing. The wealthy Scandinavian
country is not the only country targeting refugee possessions.
Switzerland has started taking valuables worth
over 1,000 Swiss francs ($985), the German state of Baden-Württemberg secures
valuables above 350 euros ($380), while other southern states have been
reported to do the same.
Denmark is not the only one trying to shut its
doors to migrants. Sweden, which took in over 160,000 refugees last year, the
most per capita in Europe, introduced checks on its border to Denmark at the
start of the year.
Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven promised
on Monday more resources for police after a 22-year-old employee was stabbed to
death at a refugee centre for unaccompanied minors. A minor was arrested
suspected of murder or manslaughter after the incident in Molndal in western
Sweden, local TT news agency reported.
Member states that do not tackle immigration
should be temporarily suspended from the Schengen area, the President of the
European People’s Party (EPP), Joseph Daul, told EurActiv yesterday.
An extension of border controls has also
sparked concerns that Greece, the landing point for about 80% of all migrants
arriving in Europe, could be effectively frozen out of Schengen. The Commission
denied yesterday that any such plans existed.
“If we do not manage to secure Europe’s
external border, this is the Greek-Turkish border, the European external border
will move towards central Europe,” Austrian Interior Minister Johanna
Mikl-Leitner said Monday. Last week Mikl-Leitner warned Athens could face
“temporary exclusion” from Schengen.
The Prime Minister of Kosovo is expected in
Brussels tomorrow to discuss an association agreement with the EU. Reports that
he would not attend because of the EU’s refusal to liberalise the visa system,
to allow easier travel into the EU, were denied by the Commission.
Migrants
drowned
Five migrants were killed on Tuesday when
their boat sank in the Aegean Sea while trying to cross from Turkey’s western
coast to EU member Greece, reports said.
16 more people were rescued by air and by sea
in a search and rescue operation by the Turkish coastguard, the Dogan news
agency said.
The migrants had earlier set off from the
district Didim in Aydin province in an apparent bid to reach the Greek island
of Farmakonisi.
Turkey, which is home to at least 2.2 million
refugees from Syria’s civil war, has become a hub for migrants seeking to reach
Europe, many of whom pay people smugglers thousands of dollars for the risky
crossing.
Ankara reached an agreement with the EU in
November to stem the flow of refugees heading to Europe, in return for €3
billion in financial assistance.
But the deal and the onset of winter do not
appear to have deterred the migrants, with boats still arriving on the Greek
islands daily.
According to a statement by the International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) Tuesday, 45,361 migrants have arrived in
Greece by sea so far this year, 31 times more than for all of January 2015.
Some 90% of the new arrivals are from Syria,
Iraq and Afghanistan,it added. The IOM said it has recorded 158 deaths in the
eastern Mediterranean this year, along with 19 more in the central
Mediterranean, bringing the total number of deaths in 2016 to 177.
Source:Eurasia Review
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